On Thu, Dec 19, 2013 at 01:15:01AM -0500, Predrag Punosevac wrote:
> I am using new post 5.0 way to start pkg_scripts. While adding
> pkg_scripts="unbound" and pkg_scripts="php-fpm" to /etc/rc.conf.local
That is not how it works. "pkg_scripts" is a variable, so you need to append to
it; otherwise
Yes, it is the Admin user password zabbix. I'm on the Freebsd port turned
normally always login. Look and discuss a similar problem
https://www.zabbix.com/forum/showthread.php?t=12144
2013/12/19 Predrag Punosevac
> I just configured Zabbix on the top of ONPP stack (OpenBSD, Nginx,
> PostgreSQL,
I am using new post 5.0 way to start pkg_scripts. While adding
pkg_scripts="unbound" and pkg_scripts="php-fpm" to /etc/rc.conf.local
works as expected this is not the case with postgresql and zabbix
agent/server. What am I doing wrong?
I just configured Zabbix on the top of ONPP stack (OpenBSD, Nginx,
PostgreSQL, PHP). However I am unable to log into web interface with the
"default user name Admin with password zabbix". I also tried user zabbix
the owner of zabbix database (I carefully read documents from
/usr/local/share/doc/pkg
On 12/18/2013 07:38 PM, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
What if you try larger block sizes? like bs=1m ?
Do you mean bs=1m for the dd tests rather than anything concerning the
file-system (newfs) or RAID configuration?
{if dd} It would take some time to get precise data along those lines (I
haven'
Adam Jensen [han...@riseup.net] wrote:
>
> In an attempt to understand the problem, I ran a similar set of tests on an
> i386 machine. While the file-system characteristics of OpenBSD and FreeBSD
> are different, I can comfortably assume that, in this case (i386), they are
> both utilizing the und
On 12/17/2013 05:05 PM, Adam Jensen wrote:
If this performance difference is simply due to OpenBSD's architecture
and implementation methods - if it's a well engineered file-system - and
maximum performance was a lower priority goal than robustness and
reliability, then the lower performance isn
Fantastic! Thanks Camiel :)
Sent from my iPhone
> On 18 Dec 2013, at 21:32, Camiel Dobbelaar wrote:
>
>> On 18/12/13 14:50, Maxim Khitrov wrote:
>>> On Wed, Dec 18, 2013 at 8:42 AM, Camiel Dobbelaar wrote:
On 18/12/13 13:53, Maxim Khitrov wrote:
When writing outbound rules in p
Tekk,
The compatibility between linux ext and unix ufs (aka ffs in 4.4BSDs) is
terrible. Both the linux kernel developers think ufs is a quagmire and the
BSD kernel folks don't use extX so they don't really know if it works.
Google Unix File System and hit the wikipedia article which explains how
t
On 18/12/13 14:50, Maxim Khitrov wrote:
On Wed, Dec 18, 2013 at 8:42 AM, Camiel Dobbelaar wrote:
On 18/12/13 13:53, Maxim Khitrov wrote:
When writing outbound rules in pf, is there an accepted best practice
for only matching packets that are either forwarded or
firewall-generated?
The best t
What happend to them? No update since october :/
--
chs,
i think that u will have to track down the packets
tcpdump can be the solution, or disable blocking while u find the offensive
rule then fix it!
> Date: Tue, 17 Dec 2013 17:56:33 +
> To: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: Re: Bizarre pf/sendmail interaction
> From: skin...@britvault.co.uk
>
> On 201
Thanks for pointing me in the right direction guys, I am now happily using
screen's copy mode for scroll back on my Serial Console sessions.
Evan Root, CCNA
On Mon, Dec 16, 2013 at 7:00 AM, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> Evan Root wrote:
>
> > Tmux is a very good idea, I hadn't thought of it
Hi everyone
TL,DR: pf between NFS server and clients - how to let the appropriate
traffic pass?
My NFS server and its clients live on different subnets, with a box
doing the routing and the filtering in between. Since I'm filtering
traffic between subnets and both mountd and nlockmgr get random p
On 18 December 2013 15:40, Bsd Club wrote:
> Well, thanks for your replies so far.
> I am currently trying to repeat the problem but it didn't happen the
> last four days (apmd is running).
>
> @Ville alkonen:
> what applications do you use? I have quite a few big ones (chrome,
> firefox, xombrero
On Wed, Dec 18, 2013 at 8:42 AM, Camiel Dobbelaar wrote:
> On 18/12/13 13:53, Maxim Khitrov wrote:
>>
>> When writing outbound rules in pf, is there an accepted best practice
>> for only matching packets that are either forwarded or
>> firewall-generated?
>>
>> The best that I could come up with i
On 18/12/13 13:53, Maxim Khitrov wrote:
When writing outbound rules in pf, is there an accepted best practice
for only matching packets that are either forwarded or
firewall-generated?
The best that I could come up with is 'received-on all' as a way of
identifying forwarded packets, but that opt
Well, thanks for your replies so far.
I am currently trying to repeat the problem but it didn't happen the
last four days (apmd is running).
@Ville alkonen:
what applications do you use? I have quite a few big ones (chrome,
firefox, xombrero, eclipse, java). I suspect that one of those
programs is
When writing outbound rules in pf, is there an accepted best practice
for only matching packets that are either forwarded or
firewall-generated?
The best that I could come up with is 'received-on all' as a way of
identifying forwarded packets, but that option can't be negated to
match packets that
On 17 December 2013 14:10, Christian Weisgerber wrote:
> Stuart Henderson wrote:
>
>> > i am using a Thinpad x220i and I have a weired problem. Most of the
>> > time, i just put my notebook into suspend mode (zzz), so, I do not often
>> > reboot. After 4 or 5 days, my notebook suddenly stops and
On 2013-12-18, Tethys wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 17, 2013 at 7:51 PM, Jan Stary wrote:
>
>>> block in log
>>> block out log on $ext
>>
>> How could anyone help you knowing just these two lines?
>> Show your pf.conf
>
> I was trying to show that I only had two block lines and that they
> both should log
On Wed, Dec 18, 2013 at 7:54 AM, Jan Stary wrote:
> So $riva is a member of $lokisafe, right?
Bingo! I knew it would be something trivial that I'd overlooked. All
working now.
Thanks,
Tet
--
"Java is a DSL for taking large XML files and converting them to stack
traces" -- Bulat Shakirzyanov
On 2013-12-12, Devin Reade wrote:
> OTOH, Bacula is (speaking from experience)
> a solid open source product and the community edition *does* do a
> form of deduplication[2] (file level, not block level), although that's
> one of the few features that I've not u
I have a Lenovo Thinkpad T60 ("cobalt") and T60p ("copper"), both
running 5.4/amd64 (the T60 is at -stable, the T60p is still at -release).
They have almost identical hardware (they differ only in graphics & wifi
chips, and that the T60 has a fingerprint scanner (unused)). They both
have 15.4" 168
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